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Media Matters

Here at Third Way Café, we believe that media matters! What you watch on TV or at the movies, listen to on the radio or Internet, video games you play, advertising you are bombarded with, and news you access - all affects you and your family. In this Media Matters section we offer fresh weekly reviews and background articles on the media. We also encourage you to browse to other sections of Third Way Café where media issues are addressed, and welcome your feedback.

Weekly Reviews


Check out Christian/Anabaptist perspectives on movies, TV, pop culture, music, books and radio. These weekly postings are written by a variety of authors on a rotating basis and are available to you on this site or as a free email subscription. Offer your own analysis and feedback in the comment section.

Latest Reviews:
Movies
Iron Man
Pacifist Superhero?

Iron Man, a film destined to be a big summer blockbuster, goes beyond routine action fare or even the latest post-9/11 political screed. It succeeds by combining some great action scenes and special effects with the moral quandaries that lead to the conversion of billionaire arms manufacturer Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) into a determined pacifist.

 
TV
The Wire
HBO Series

The Wire is a cop show about a unit of Baltimore police men and women, and the people they study, surveille, and prosecute. The world is richly detailed, in language, in character, in landscape, in bureaucratic routine, in personal vice. As deep and peopled as any Tolkienian fantasy, The Wire's universe requires some education for viewers, familiarization with weird jargon and habits; city politicians squeeze through baroque mazes of bureaucratic machinery, cops engage in arcane rituals after hours, and young "soldiers" in the drug trade learn the ropes of procuring, transporting, distributing, and guarding narcotics.

 
Movies
Meet the Browns
Tyler Perry: American Playwright (and much more)

In Meet the Browns, Tyler Perry authored the play, adapted it to film, directed it and plays “Madea.” It is an urban fairy tale about a single mother Brenda (Angela Bassett) who is struggling to raise her three children when she simultaneously loses her job and her father, whom she has never met. She travels from Chicago to Georgia to meet her family—the Browns. Most of the characters, but especially the Browns, are caricatures.

 
 

Be a Critic - Media Articles


Articles, essays and tools to help you and your family be more aware of trends, how to critique, analyze and consume (or not!) current media. Check out the ones that interest you. Forward them on to friends. Discuss them in your Sunday school classes or around the office cooler. Send us your own ideas as well.

 

Movies


Questions for Your Own Film Night - [2/10/2006]
Interested in hosting your own film night? Consider these questions, provided by Vic Thiessen, representing Mennonite Church Canada Witness and Mennonite Mission Network at the London Mennonite Centre, as ways to start a discussion.

Dialogue With Film - [2/10/2006]
As the film industry prepares annually for its Academy Awards, some religious groups are suggesting that Hollywood has nothing to offer the faithful. But Vic Thiessen, executive director of the London Mennonite Centre, believes that the movie medium’s tremendous power to influence lives, thoughts and even beliefs makes film-watching vital to understand the modern world, even if the messages do not always fit into Christian theology.

Why I Write About R-rated Movies - [2/10/2006]
On occasion while writing movie reviews, I have received criticism for including reviews (actually brief comments, for the most part) of R-rated films. Often the comments are not detailed criticism but dismay that we mention such films in any kind of positive light.

The Making of a Movie Critic
Movies
- [6/20/2007]

I am a movie buff, not an expert, but definitely an aficionado. Now I am a movie critic. How did that happen? I’m glad you asked.
 

 

TV


How to Watch Television with Your Grandchildren - [2/3/2006]
To older people the world we thought we knew seems to be continually disappearing and electronic media are a large part of the new vistas that continually emerge. In contrast to the relative simplicity of our own childhood, many of us view the media playthings surrounding our grandchildren with awe.

Vast Pig Trough - [2/9/2006]
I used to watch TV frequently with our children. Then they grew into teenagers and now spend less time watching TV.

Images From Soap Operas: How Do They Play into Attitudes Towards Americans? - [2/9/2006]
How many Americans are aware that the most sophisticated tools of modern communication are being used on a daily basis in a vast program of disinformation about this country and its people that is beamed into almost every country on earth?

Media-Wise Parents - [2/9/2006]
"I like to think of myself as a hip mom, but I have to admit I’m appalled by the sexuality and vulgarity in today’s music and movies. Other than throwing out the TV, how can I protect my teenager from all these media influences?"

What Are Your Kids Watching? Christian parenting in a TV-and-Net world - [2/9/2006]
Something didn't feel right. We were set to sign the lease on a new apartment—a much larger one. Raising four kids in a 44-story highrise in Hong Kong is not for the squeamish, and I looked forward to the additional space. But something kept nettling me.

Be Careful Little Eyes What You See: Impact of Horror Films - [2/9/2006]
I first began to suspect I had been traumatized by some childhood experience when I began researching children in crisis while I was in college and after.

Don’t Have a Cow, Man! - [2/9/2006]
When The Simpsons creator Matt Groening was a Boy Scout, he stole a Gideon Bible from a hotel room and underlined all the dirty parts. Confronted by a furious scoutmaster, Groening (pronounced graining) recalled in a recent interview with My Generation magazine, "I prayed to God and said, ‘I know you'll forgive me for not believing in you.'"

How to Lower the Amount of TV Your Family Watches
Cut the Cord
- [4/18/2006]
Do your kids still spending too much time on the couch? It doesn't have to be that way. Instead, use the following tips to pull your family away from the tube to enjoy more family fun.

 

Music


Absorbing the Rap Culture Shock - [2/10/2006]
The summer before my senior year in college, I worked as an investigator for the DC Public Defender Service, spending most of my time driving around the streets of Southeast DC looking for crime witnesses. My investigative partner used this opportunity to seize control of the radio and force me to listen to Rap and Hip-Hop ceaselessly, assuring me that it would make us “cool with the clients.”

 

Advertising


How to Keep Kids From Wanting Too Much - [2/10/2006]
When it gets down to the second week of December, most of us forget about creativity and ideas of having an “alternative, simple” Christmas and just haul out the charge card.

 

Pop Culture


Techno-faith - [2/10/2006]
If Jesus had had access to the Internet, would He have needed 12 disciples? Or could He have used just one guy with good typing skills and a high-speed data line? Paige Braddock posed this question in the Atlanta Journal and Constitution recently.

Popular Media: Turn Them To “Kingdom Advantage” - [2/10/2006]
Movie fare for my 1960’s church youth group consisted of films designed either to save your soul or to prove the scientific veracity of the Bible. Even to this teenager growing up in a sheltered religious environment, they seemed hokey and unreal.

 

Books


Code Word: It’s fiction - [2/10/2006]
In January I joined hundreds of thousands who have read The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. I did not, however, join the many who have kept it at the top of the best-seller list for months; I borrowed a copy.

 

Internet


Virtual Experience - [2/10/2006]
I like technology. It's my career, first for 13 years with IBM and then at a Mennonite university. I love the hectic pace, the complexity, the rapid change. My career has consisted of helping people acquire and use technology. I like to think I've helped my clients become more efficient, creative and effective.

Media Addiction - [2/10/2006]
We are accustomed to hearing about alcohol and drug addiction, but what about addiction to entertainment and media? Media and entertainment addiction is essentially the compulsion for, devotion to and/or obsession with one or more types of media or entertainment. The addiction can be hard to recognize due to the fact that today's culture heavily endorses media and entertainment.

The Intimacy Fix: Is There a Way to Escape Internet Porn's Compelling Lure? - [2/10/2006]
It was the fourth one of the day—a disclosure from a pastor related to Internet pornography!

 

Video Games


Video Game Military Tactics Desensitize Children - [2/10/2006]
An informal survey indicates that the video game industry is still promoting violence to children, says the spokesperson of a coalition wanting government to regulate video games.

Violent Video Games: What Christian Parents Can Do - [2/10/2006]
"One of the most effective ways for Christians to be salt and light is by simply confronting the culture of violence as entertainment." — Lt. Col. David Grossman

 

Radio


Talk radio: Rudeness and ugliness masquerading as entertainment - [2/10/2006]
Imagine that friends invite you over for a small dinner party. You look forward to an evening of good food and relaxed conversation.

 

News


Writing About War: Take It With a Grain of Sand - [2/10/2006]
War seems like the obvious column topic. Too frequently it is on every tongue, on every page, in every newscast, on your home page.


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